Temps were 33 this morning here, but I'm already in shorts anda t-shirt!
These habitats sound like the ones for wood bees which are excellent pollinators. The house is not for them to store honey, but for the bee to lay eggs. The "house" holds straws that the female lays her egg, places a food and then seals it lays another egg, etc. Each straw can hold up to five eggs. The reason for storage is so that the eggs don't freeze. In windy sections of the state, you can attach the house to a piece of plywood and attach it to a fence. I have used coffee can inside a wooden box with an overhang roof, filled with straws and in late fall, pulled the can and placed it in the crisper of the barn fridge for storage. In the spring, it goes back into the wooden box for hatch.
I keep a notebook when I order seeds where I include a copy of the seed order and make notes on what I ordered a set of seed for and where I wanted to plant them. When notes are made when I order, my Partsheimers is not a problem.
The wild turkeys are strutting their stuff. The hens only lay in the spring and that carried over to the domestic varieties.
I had coffee when I read your comment on the "seasoned" girls!! LOL!